Cassette with recording medium, in particular magnetic tape cassette

ABSTRACT

A cassette with a recording medium, in particular a magnetic recording medium, is designed with a displaceable identification part which can be pushed into the cassette housing. For this purpose, a web is provided behind a cassette opening in a cassette wall, which web runs at an angle with respect to the cassette wall. It is also possible to provide a web which is approximately parallel to the cassette wall, and the identification part, designed as a slide, is provided with a front beveling, in the opening sliding direction, in order to push the slide partially past the edge of the cassette wall located in the opening direction. The cassette can be used for recording/reproducing signals of any type, and any functions of the associated cassette apparatus can be controlled indirectly by the positionally displaceable identification part.

This application is a division of application Ser. No. 07/928,606, filedon Aug. 13, 1992, now abandoned.

The present invention relates to a cassette with a recording medium, inparticular a magnetic tape cassette, comprising a housing with top,bottom and front, rear and side walls, an opening being provided in atleast one of the front, rear and side walls, with a displaceableidentification part closing this opening at least partially, and atleast one hook part of the identification part gripping around a wall ofthe housing.

Erase tabs which are located on the rear side of the housing and, whilepresent, do not prevent erasure of the recorded information are knownfrom commercially available audio and video cassettes. In order toprotect recorded information from erasure, these erase tabs have to bebroken out and the cavity produced sends the equipment theidentification signal to inhibit the recording and erasing mechanism. Tomake such a cassette able to record again, it is necessary to tape overthe cavity, which is unsatisfactory however since the detecting means ofthe equipment may be very sensitive and consequently the expectedsuccess of erasing and re-recording is not achieved.

German Laid-Open Application DOS 2,323,611 discloses identificationparts for cassettes which are designed as a metal or plastic elementwith two tongues and are able to either cover or expose neighboringclearances by independent actuation of the tongues. The metal or plasticidentification elements are displaceable in a groove on the outside ofthe cassette housing, and consequently their function may be impaired bythe effect of particles or dirt.

U.S. Pat. No. 4,769,731 discloses a cover-symmetrical identificationpart which, when fitted, grips around at least one jacket wall and canbe displaced between two positions, opening or closure, only in theplane of one jacket side, of for example a data diskette.

It is an object of the present invention to avoid the disadvantages ofthe known identification elements and to provide a cassette with a moreexpedient identification part.

We have found that, in the case of a cassette with a recording medium,in particular a magnetic tape cassette, comprising a housing with top,bottom and front, rear and side walls, an opening being provided in atleast one of the front, rear and side walls, with a displaceableidentification part closing this opening at least partially, at leastone hook part of the identification part gripping around an inner wallof the housing, this object is achieved according to the invention bythe identification part being displaceable by means of the hook part,guided on an inner wall of the housing, which inner wall is provided atan angle to the rear wall in the interior of the housing, so that theidentification part can be displaced in the opening direction along anoblique path into the housing.

The object is likewise achieved in the case of a cassette defined aboveif the identification part is displaceable by means of the hook part,guided on an inner wall of the housing, which inner wall is providedessentially parallel to the rear wall in the interior of the housing andthe identification part is provided in the opening direction with abeveling, for displacing into the housing along a displacement pathsubstantially parallel to the rear wall of the housing.

Both versions of the cassette according to the invention solve theproblem of displacing an identification part, which in the closedposition is arranged over a housing opening, partially flush with thehousing outer wall, in a guided manner into the interior of thecassette, so that the housing opening is exposed, and of allowing thedisplacing operation to then be reversed with the same precision untilthe closed position is reached. At the same time, mass production of thecassette is also achieved by a simple design of the identification partitself and few modifications to parts of commercially availablecassettes.

In a practical embodiment, the wall may be a web on the bottom or topwall of the housing.

If such a web is not already provided and able to be used, it should beformed on the bottom wall or on the top wall, which is easily carriedout by injection molding. The web on which the hook part can bedisplaced may be expediently arranged at an angle of at least about 5°,preferably of about 10° to about 20°, with respect to the longitudinalaxis of the rear wall.

This makes it possible, even without special flattening of theidentification part, to push the latter at least partially behind a partof the rear wall, that is to say in the longitudinal direction into thehousing, so that a cavity for equipment sensing is exposed.

In a further embodiment, with displacement in the vertical direction,the web on which the hook part can be displaced may be arranged at anangle of at least about 5°, preferably of about 10° to about 20°, withrespect to an axis of the rear wall arranged vertically to thelongitudinal axis.

Consequently, displacement behind the upper part of the rear wall, thatis to say vertically into the housing, to expose a cavity can beaccomplished as described above.

The identification part may expediently have in the front part, seen inthe opening direction, a flattening with the same angle as theassociated stay.

This optimizes the relative arrangement of the identification part andthe web.

In the embodiment with the web essentially parallel to the rear wall,the identification part is provided in the front part, seen in theopening direction of displacement, with a beveling of likewise at leastabout 5°, in particular of about 10°.

In a further practical embodiment, the hook part may be arrangedessentially at one end, in particular at the rear end in the openingdirection, of the identification part. The arrangement of an engaginggroove or an engaging tongue, on the side of the identification partopposite the hook part, is also expedient. If the hook part is providedat the rear end of the identification part, seen in the openingdirection of displacement, this provides good accessibility of theactuation parts, of the groove or the tongue, in every position of theidentification part. In order to define the closed and open positions ofthe identification part, it is advantageous to provide catch devices forthe opening and closed position between identification part and stay, inparticular only on the web.

In order to prevent the identification part tilting or dropping out, itis advantageous to make the height of the identification part at leastpartly greater than the inside height of the half rear wall of thehousing.

In a first embodiment, the hook part may have a vertically arrangedcontinuation for support on the upper part of the cassette. Ifappropriate, a holding-down means for the identification part may alsobe additionally provided here. It is, however, better in a secondembodiment if the identification part is made to correspond in heightapproximately to the inside height of the rear wall of the housing,since then there is no need for otherwise necessary holding-down means.

As far as the arrangement of the stay is concerned, a connection to ausually provided cylinder sleeve for a fastening screw is expedient, inparticular for a longitudinally displaceable identification part.However, it may also be advantageous for the web to be connected to aninside wall usually provided in the housing, in particular forvertically displaceable identification parts.

It is, furthermore, advantageous if the identification part consists ofa polyacetal material or a fluorocarbon material, in particular onaccount of their low abrasion properties and good sliding properties.The identification part may therefore expediently consist ofpolyoxymethylene (POM) or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE). Theidentification part may also generally consist of an abrasion-resistentplastic material with a proportion of pigment, in order in particular tomake it possible in the production of the cassette for theidentification parts to be produced, made ready, fitted and checkedwell.

Illustrative embodiments of the invention are described below andrepresented in the drawing, in which:

FIG. 1 shows a perspective corner part of a cassette bottom partaccording to the invention,

FIG. 2 shows a perspective identification part for use in a cassetteaccording to FIG. 1,

FIG. 3 shows a diagrammatic plan view of the corner part of the cassettebottom part according to FIG. 1 with an identification part according toFIG. 2 in the closed position,

FIG. 4 shows the plan view from FIG. 3 with the identification part inthe open position,

FIG. 5 shows a reduced-scale, diagrammatic plan view of a completecassette bottom part with the identification part in the closedposition,

FIG. 6 shows a version of an identification part of FIG. 2,

FIG. 7 shows the identification part of FIG. 6 in the closed position ina diagrammatic plan view corresponding to FIG. 3,

FIG. 8 shows a cutout of a ready-assembled cassette housing withholding-down ribs shown diagrammatically in the cassette upper part,

FIG. 9 shows the cutout according to FIG. 8 with a rear wall thickeningas holding-down means in the cassette upper part,

FIG. 10 shows a further version of an identification part for verticaldisplacement, and

FIG. 11 shows a perspective corner part of a cassette bottom partaccording to FIG. 1 with a web and the identification part according toFIG. 10 for vertical displacement.

FIG. 2 shows an identification part, slide 5, which can be hung by meansof a hook part 7, provided at the rear end 6, on an inner wall as a web8 of the bottom part 9 of the housing of a video cassette 10 and can bedisplaced in the opening direction (arrow a). An engaging groove 11,which can also be replaced by a tongue, serves for actuation of theidentification part.

The term identification part as used with respect to this invention isto be understood as meaning any erase and write inhibiting means andsymbols and markings on cassettes which are physically provided and canbe sensed and evaluated by suitable equipment.

As the diagrammatic functional representations of FIGS. 3 and 4 reveal,the slide 5 serves by displacement in the plane of the bottom wall 12 ofthe cassette 10 for opening, see FIG. 4 for open position, and closing,see FIG. 3 for closed position, of the opening 13 or the cavity (FIG. 4)in the rear wall 14 of the cassette 10.

FIG. 5 shows a complete bottom part of the cassette 10, revealing thatthe corner part represented, for example in FIGS. 1, 3 and 4, is theleft-hand rear corner of the bottom part 9. The following are furtherspecial features of the cassette 10 in FIGS. 1 to 5.

The web 8 is arranged between the cylindrical liner 15 for a fasteningscrew (not shown) and an inside wall 16 of the bottom part 9, said wallin this case running approximately perpendicularly with respect to therear wall 14, this arrangement achieving a very stable design. The web 8is provided on the rear with catch ribs 17, which interact with theflexible hook part 7, to be more precise with the hook gap 18 in the twocatch positions, the open position (FIG. 4) and the closed position(FIG. 3).

The web 8 is arranged at an angle α of about 10° with respect to therear wall 14 or with respect to the longitudinal axis (not shown) of thelatter; the angle α may, however, be at least 5° and should in practicelie in the range of α being about 10° to α being about 20°.

As can be seen well in FIGS. 3 and 4, the thickness d of the front part19 of the slide 5 is adapted to the width b of the distance betweencylinder sleeve 15 and rear wall section 20 in such a way that the slide5 on its displacement path into the open position and into the closedposition, and in these two positions, is always guided itself at twopoints.

Of course, it is also possible to choose the arrangement and length ofthe hook part 32 of the slide 30, for example as shown in FIGS. 10 and11, in such a way that a stable guidance on the displacement path and inthe positions of rest is achieved even without any special guidance ofthe front part of the slide 30.

Rear wall section 20 and front part 19 of the slide 5 may, as shown, beexpediently flattened off in a wedge-shaped manner, for instance withthe angle α of the web 8. It is also possible, however, to design onlyone of the two surfaces as wedge-shaped or to make the correspondingedges rounded-off.

The vertical extension 21 of the hook part 7 serves the purpose ofcaptivating the slide by guidance in the upper part of the cassette 10and preventing tilting. The height of the front part 19 of the slide 5corresponds approximately to half the inner height h of the overallinner height 2h of the rear wall 14.

In order to stabilize the position of the slide 5 still further, it isalso possible, as FIGS. 8 and 9 show, to provide holding-down means,additional stays 22 and 23 in FIG. 8 or a thickening 2 of the rear wall24 of the upper part 26 in FIG. 9, which are arranged above the slide 5and prevent it from undesirable vertical movement. In FIGS. 8 and 9, thelines of the upper part 26 of the cassette 10 are shown solid and thelines of the bottom part 9 are shown broken. 27 denotes the counterpartof the cylinder liner 15. 28 is a part of the window in the upper part26.

As an alternative to the described holding-down means of FIGS. 8 and 9,FIG. 6 shows a design of a slide 29 of a height H which is greater thanhalf the inside height h and may essentially correspond to the entireinside height 2h of the rear wall 14. This achieves better tiltingstability, better guidance and good sliding movement of the slide 29without complicated modifications to the upper part 26. The design ofthe slide 29, hook part 7 and groove 11 is otherwise unchanged from thatof slide 5. On the front part 19, however, there can be seen a bevelingat the angle α, which basically enables the slide 29 to move into thehousing of the cassette 10 even without an angled position of the web 8,that is to say with an essentially parallel position with respect to therear wall 14. FIG. 7, however, shows the slide 29 again in connectionwith the web 8 positioned obliquely at the angle α, corresponding toFIGS. 1 and 3 to 5.

FIGS. 10 and 11 show a slide 30 in connection with a web 31 whichextends higher than the inside height h of the half rear wall 14 and inthis case is formed on the inside wall 16 and not on the cylinder liner15. Thus, a cylinder liner 15 need not be provided, which is also thecase of course in cassette housings which are riveted or welded and notscrewed. The sleeve 15 is also omitted if a screwed joint is notprovided at this point.

The slide 30 is provided with a hook part 32, which extends over thefull height and is attached in a position turned through 90° incomparison with the hook part 7, in order to make it possible to griparound the in this case vertical web 31 and to achieve guidance over thevertical displacement path by the greater length of the hook part 32 incomparison with hook part 7. A guiding angled edge 33 further improvesthis guiding effect by support on the end of the rear wall section 24.The web 31 is in this case perpendicular and not inclined at an angle tothe upright rear wall 14, as is the web 8 with respect to thelongitudinal axis of the rear wall 14.

Therefore, the slide 30 is given a beveling 35 at an angle α of at least5°, in practice of from about 10° to about 20°, in order that the slide30 can be pushed along the vertical displacement path past the loweredge (not shown) of the rear wall half, into the upper part 26 of thecassette 10.

It is also possible, however, to design the web 31 as inclined rearwards(into the plane of the drawing) at the angle α described above of atleast 5°, in practice of from about 10° to about 20°. In the latter casealso, depending on how the edge of the rear wall 14 of the upper part 26is designed, the front part of the slide 30 can likewise be designedwith a wedge-shaped flattening, as in the case of the front part 19 inFIG. 2.

A polyacetal or a fluorocarbon may be expediently used as material forthe slide 5, 29 or 30, for example polyoxymethylene orpolytetrafluoroethylene, on account of their low abrasion properties andgood sliding properties. However, it is also possible to useabrasion-resistent plastic. All suitable plastics may also containpigments.

A cassette with a recording medium, in particular a magnetic recordingmedium, is designed with a displaceable identification part which can bepushed into the cassette housing. For this purpose, a web is providedbehind a cassette opening in a cassette wall, which web runs at an anglewith respect to said cassette wall. It is also possible to provide a webwhich is approximately parallel to the cassette wall, and theidentification part, designed as a slide, is provided with a frontbeveling, in the opening sliding direction, in order to push the slidepartially past the edge of the cassette wall located in the openingdirection.

The cassette can be used for recording/reproducing signals of any type,and any functions of the associated cassette apparatus can be controlledindirectly by the positionally displaceable identification part.

The slide mechanisms described have been used in practice and tested aserase-inhibiting elements in video cassettes and have also performedextremely well in extended time tests.

We claim:
 1. In a magnetic tape cassette comprising a housing with top,bottom, front, rear and side walls, wherein at least one of said front,rear or side walls has at least one opening therein, which opening, whenuncovered, provides a cavity in the housing such that when the openingis uncovered, recording and/or erasure is inhibited, and when saidopening is covered recording and/or erasure is uninhibited;theimprovement wherein the housing is provided with an inner wall section,which inner wall section forms an angle to the wall having the opening;and wherein a displaceable identification part for covering anduncovering said opening is provided within the housing, saididentification part having a length and height sufficient to cover saidopening when in the covering position, said identification partcomprising a hook part and a front part, said front part is beveled inthe direction for displacement of the identification part adapted touncovering the opening, wherein said hook part has a hook gap whichhooks over the back of said inner wall section for the identificationpart to slide along said inner wall section as it is displaced, saidfront part providing for guidance of the identification part on theinner surface of the portion of the wall having the opening; whereby theidentification part is displaceable into the housing, sliding along theinner wall section on a path oblique to the wall in which thethereby-uncovered opening is located.
 2. A cassette as claimed in claim1, wherein the wall is a web on the bottom wall or top wall of thehousing.
 3. A cassette as claimed in claim 2, wherein the web on whichthe hook part is displaceable is arranged at an angle of at least about5° with respect to the longitudinal axis of the wall with the openingtherein.
 4. A cassette as claimed in claim 1, wherein the said frontpart is beveled at essentially the same angle at which the inner wall isarranged.
 5. A cassette as claimed in claim 1, wherein the hook part isarranged essentially at one end of the identification part.
 6. Acassette as claimed in claim 1, wherein an engaging means is provided onthe side of the identification part opposite the hook part.
 7. Acassette as claimed in claim 1, wherein catch devices for the open andclosed position are provided between the identification part and saidinner wall.
 8. A cassette as claimed in claim 1, wherein the height ofthe identification part is at least partly greater than the insideheight of the half rear wall of the housing.
 9. A cassette as claimed inclaim 1 wherein the inner wall is a web connected to a cylinder sleevefor a fastening screw of the cassette housing.
 10. A cassette as claimedin claim 1, wherein the inner wall is a web which is connected toanother inside wall of the housing.
 11. A cassette as claimed in claim1, wherein at least one holding-down means for the identification partis provided in the cassette housing above the displacement path.
 12. Acassette as claimed in claim 1, wherein the identification partcorresponds in height approximately to the inside height of the rearwall of the housing.
 13. A cassette as claimed in claim 1, wherein theidentification part consists of a polyacetal material material.
 14. Acassette as claimed in claim 1, wherein the identification part consistsof an abrasion-resistant plastic with a proportion of pigment.
 15. Acassette as claimed in claim 1 wherein a cylinder sleeve for fasteningof the cassette housing is provided within the housing in the vicinityof said opening, wherein the front part of the identification part isguided between the inner surface of the wall section in the openingdirection and the peripheral surface of the said sleeve.
 16. A cassetteas in claim 1 wherein the wall containing the at least one opening isthe rear wall.
 17. A cassette as in claim 3 wherein said angle isbetween 10° to about 20°.